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Dave McCoy

1915 - 2020

Dave McCoy obituary, 1915-2020

BORN

1915

DIED

2020

Dave McCoy Obituary

DAVE MCCOY
1915 – 2020
'Don't let work get in the way of having a good time'
DAVE MC COY, founder of Mammoth Mountain Ski Area, passed away February 8, at the age of 104.
Dave was born August 24, 1915, in El Segundo, California, to Edna and Bill 'Mac' McCoy. Mac's job, improving and paving California State highways in the 1920's, meant an itinerant childhood for young Dave for whom 'home' was in the tent camps that followed the work. A solid self-reliance developed from the nomadic upbringing. He spent long days playing in the rural outdoors alone, learned early on the value of a hard day's work and, out of necessity, perfected the art of making friends with strangers by changing schools, often seasonally, as the work progressed.
The stresses of the Great Depression led to Edna and Mac's divorce in 1930. Distraught, his Mom reluctantly sent Dave to live with his paternal grandparents, Bob and Katie Cox, in Wilkeson, Washington. Here Dave thrived in a settled home, making his mark in high school athletics. But, his wandering nature led him to hitchhike seasonally back to sunny California to escape the Northwest weather. A naturally gifted athlete, he would earn letters in football, baseball, basketball and track at high schools in both states.
In 1931, before he'd ever tried skiing, Dave made his first pair of skis in woodshop and was soaring off hand-shoveled jumps by the end of his first day, having heard it was a great way to impress the girls. Memories of a summer trip, in which he'd fished in pristine alpine lakes ringed by snowfields, left an indelible impression and he pledged then to return. The day after graduating from high school in Washington, he kept his promise, and rode his motorcycle to Independence, California, where he worked as a soda jerk, did odd jobs and started studying hydrography with an eye on High Sierra fieldwork for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. He got an early job working on the LA Aqueduct, but once he became certified as a hydrographer, he landed his dream job --- skiing and hiking long distances daily to monitor Sierra stream flows and snowpack.
This was when the massive expanse of Mammoth Mountain first caught his eye; so, too, a young Bishop girl named Roma Carriere. Their courtship revolved around hiking, fishing in alpine lakes, skiing and dancing. They married on May 10, 1941, in Yuma, California, settled in Bishop and started a family the next year.
Rope tows were just being conceived then and were mostly jerry-rigged, do-it-yourself jobs with pulleys and ropes attached to a vehicle. Dave's mechanical skills, learned from watching and helping his Dad as a child, were perfectly suited to the era, and Dave and Roma started carrying a portable tow in the back of their car, setting it up wherever the snow was best, encouraging friends to join them.
A founding member of the Eastern Sierra Ski Club, as well as the Mammoth Mountain Ski Club and Winter Sports Organization, Dave operated portable tows for years on the North slopes of Mammoth and on McGee Mountain, thirty miles south, for those times when Mammoth was inaccessible due to heavy snows.
When America entered World War II, Dave's DWP job was deemed 'essential' by the US government, denying him his dream to fly missions against the Germans as a Navy pilot. But, he worked honorably to protect California's water supply and served soldiers-on-leave by setting up rope tow rides, lessons and equipment, all for free, at his portable tows, all while becoming an avid ski racer and high school ski coach.
Dave was the 1937 California State Slalom Champion at age 22, while coaching the Bishop High Ski Team, and eventually a number of future stars on the international ski-racing scene.
Dave staged many iconic and long-running Eastern Sierra races through a desire to bring the sport to the masses, regardless of ability level. He founded the Inyo-Mono Championships in 1937, and staged decades of renowned costume party races to celebrate Easter, Memorial Day and the 4th of July on skis. A horrific injury, at a downhill race in Sugar Bowl, California in 1942, nearly resulted in amputation of his left leg. Only multiple experimental surgeries saved his leg and it took years to recover.
In 1953, the Forest Service ceased looking elsewhere for big-money investors to develop Mammoth Mountain and awarded the permit to Dave, who had a reputation for hard work and passionate devotion to the mountain. The Forest Service trusted that Dave, who could fix any mechanical problem with ingenuity and a smile, would get the job done. The permit stipulated that Dave improve runs, add food service, provide first aid and build a chairlift. Dave began construction of Mammoth's first base lodge that summer. Chair One, the Eastern Sierra's first chairlift, was up and running two years later. Both projects were completed at minimal cost using devoted crews of hard-working friends and locals, aided by volunteers who showed up daily to help the man who had long championed skiing for the community.
Mammoth grew by leaps and bounds over the next thirty years and he purchased June Mountain in l986 with a plan to connect both resorts. Today Mammoth/June boasts 4 lodges, 3 gondolas and 34 chairlifts……he turned 2 remote mountains into a single, world-class ski resort.
Dave was a self-taught brand of engineer, a true 'Mr. Wizard' in ski area technology, and many of his ideas and inventions are still being used in the ski industry today.
He created the Kamikaze Bike Downhill mountain bike descent off Mammoth's famed Cornice, with a start elevation of 11,053 feet, which continues to attract world-class mountain bikers from all over the globe.
In 1968 he designed, helped build and maintained the Mammoth Motocross Track , which was the site of national and international-level meets. Dave competed in his last race at the age of 80.
He owned and operated the first commercial airline serving Mammoth, which opened the way for better air service to follow.
Dave's civic accomplishments were legion. He helped raise funds to establish the first Mammoth hospital in l978, worked on incorporating Mammoth Lakes as a town in 1984 and in l989 his vision to cultivate higher education and the arts in the Eastern Sierra resulted in the formation of Mammoth Lakes Foundation, which donated the land and help build the area's first institution of higher learning --- Cerro Coso Community College.
Underpinning Dave's long and storied life is the way he saw almost everything and every person he met in a positive light. His generosity, efforts and achievements have been acknowledged with many awards through his life, just to name a few: He has been inducted into the Ski Hall of Fame and Ski Magazine Hall of Fame, Edison honored him with the Southern California Edison Environmental Excellence award, he received the national Ski areas Association Lifetime Achievement Award and was chosen Entrepreneur of the Year of California by Earnest & Young.
After running Mammoth Mountain Ski area for 68 years, Dave sold a major share of Mammoth and June to Intrawest Resort Holdings. Then in 2005, at the age of 90, he sold the remainder of his shares to Starwood Capitol Group and retired. In his retirement, to no one's surprise, Dave stayed active exploring the Eastern Sierras he loved on his ATV, accompanied by family, friends and his camera.
Dave is survived by the love of his life, Roma Carriere McCoy, with whom he was married for 78 years and their six children: Gary McCoy (wife Barbi), Dennis 'Poncho' McCoy (wife Beverly), Carl McCoy, Penny McCoy, Kandi Stewart (husband Rusty) and Randy McCoy, 19 grandchildren, 34 great-grandchildren and one great-great grandchild.
Dave's family and friends closed many ski races, parties and celebrations by cheering three times the age-old alpine skier's cheer, which translates simply to 'Good Skiing' So, let us close the final chapter of a life well lived by a remarkable man: Ski Heil! Ski Heil! Ski Heil!!
Thank you for the support of our family and your love of Dad over the decades. We are appreciative of all the good wishes and would ask you to make a donation to Mammoth Lakes Foundation in lieu of flowers. We are working through this difficult period in our lives and have not scheduled a memorial ceremony for the community to pay their respects at this time.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Mammoth Times on Feb. 13, 2020.

Memories and Condolences
for Dave McCoy

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Monette Ramer-Amaya

February 7, 2025

Still missing you , Dave McCoy ...from the start of the 395 ...starting at Adelanto to the Cornice....we still have your influence in our thoughts. Wishing many , many new blessings onto your family....and know that we will always remember how Mammoth came to be such a special place.

Carol

May 25, 2024

Dave McCoy was always an inspiration when I was an older child he was always around I think skiing with his grandchildren he was so friendly. I felt safe when he was there I knew he was a magnificent man. I went on to become a junior National Escape Patrol and ski patrol and worked and went to college. I became a healthcare professional and I'm a member of the national ski patrol today. I think of the times the ski patrol would ski with me at Mammoth because I wanted to be a ski patrol and was a ski racer. They told me they did not hire women at that time. That sure changed and I'm glad for it. I think Dave was such a spiritual loving man smart and disciplined with knowledge off the charts. I'm so proud of him and his wife and family. He is the true tribe of skiers I am happy to belong to. I have a Finnish American background and skiing was just something you did. Though my family had means when I turned 17 my father said he would not pay for my skiing so I found a way to do it and worked jobs and went to college. I asked everybody I saw on the lifeline what they did for a living cuz I wanted to find out which job would make it affordable to ski. Thank goodness for the Iko and pass that makes Mammoth affordable. In my opinion Mammoth is the best ski area in the world and Dave McCoy's Spirit emanates from everywhere, if you knew him. I am so glad his grandchildren are still there and people in management and leadership that knew him and carry on in the tradition of caring. Thanks for sharing his life with us and giving us the opportunity to share our experiences and gratitude.

Monette Vahtie Ramer-Amaya

February 7, 2024

Mammoth is good, Mammoth is beautiful ....but , it's not the same without Dave McCoy. God bless him and his family for getting Mammoth on the map ...forever and ever.

Diana Lee

March 21, 2022

Oh wonderful Dave McCoy! I did not have the honor of knowing you personally in your century plus on earth but you certainly influenced my life in a truly wonderful way. What else can I say but thank you for all your work turning Mammoth Mountsin into a world class destination. When I was in college I skied my first very awkward run down Broadway and managed to end it standing up. From that day on I was hooked. I lived in Mammoth for four years in the 80s and will be returning there soon for the rest of my days. I just can´t wait to be in all that rugged, spiritual magnificence again. We will be purchasing a beautiful home on Le Verne Street, with so many great times to look forward to. I love watching The Other Side of the Mountain over and over, and didn´t Dabney Coleman do a great McCoy portrayal! God Blessed Your Soul and RIP. Deepest condolences to the McCoy Family.

Rick Patras

January 26, 2022

Dave, you and your family were an inspiration to me when I was in high school at Ridgecrest, CA. I been skiing for three years in Michigan at a small resort. We moved to Ridgecrest my first year of high school and skied cheaply at Mammoth from 1964-2968. I met you and different members of your family and was so touched by your welcoming and warmth. I felt at home there and made the 31/2 hour drive up there as often as I could. As a member of the China Lake ski club I was able to stay in overnight. You and your family have made a major impact to my life, and I thank you for being a friend of a short skier that lived skiing at your incredible creation at Mammoth. I just wish I could´ve kept up with Penny going on my 20 runs a day there...but , no chance! :-) You were a blessing to all of us.

Louise Dessert Inder

October 21, 2021

I had no idea you were born in El Segundo, so was my dad! Born in 1919. RIP Dave you were a force to reckon with and made skiing so fun for so many!

Monette Ramer-Amaya

August 1, 2021

I finally made it here. I've been coming to Mammoth Lakes and especially to ski Mammoth Mountain ...since 1971. I met my husband at the Innsbruck. Dave McCoy was more than just a man in my mind. Big time, great person. I never thought I would be a FB friend of his. We exchanged comments on his page from time to time...then his movie endeavor came to be a public idea. We exchanged more online conversation and I happily donated to the production of the movie. What was extra cool was we continued to exchange conversation. One day there was a critter at his backyard door.He contacted me because he knew I worked at an animal shelter at the time. He wasn't sure what it was and thought that I might know.It was around one pm. I felt so lucky to converse with this idol of mine. I told him I would stop in and meet him one day soon. Unfortunately, medical stuff came up for my family before I could keep my promise. But, this summer ...one year after...I am here offering thoughts of a life spent so well. A person can't help but think about Dave McCoy and his lovely Roma, and family. A life very well played.... from El Segundo to Mammoth Mountain. Amazing self determination. ...You, his family, are his best
tribute to his beautiful life. God bless you. Sincerely.

Terry Lazar

August 11, 2020

As Mammoth was in the early stages of its development, I was taken back by your
humor, compassion and candor on those long weekends, summer ski testing and traveling together to races, was the highlight of my young life.

For you support and guidance from 1962-1971 as we trained for to reach our goals and aspersions to make the US Ski Team.

Although I was unable to make that goal, you tough me to work hard, understand my faults and for 9 years gave the confidence needed to succeed. That along has given me the foundation to live a life of successful endeavors for which I externally greafully.

Your legacy will never be forgotten...

Group of 10 Memorial Trees

Terry Lazar

Planted Trees

Pete Henderson

February 27, 2020

I will never forget while working on the gondola when you would come out shake our hands and hangout and you treated us just like we were good friends and genuinely cared.

February 24, 2020

Thanks DAVE
Love You, JIm

February 14, 2020

Dave, Thank you for opening up Mammoth Mountain. I learned how to ski and skied there from 6th to 12th grade in Bishop. You will be missed

Showing 1 - 12 of 12 results

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